2,814 research outputs found

    Author interview: Q and A with Dr Ian Sanjay Patel on we’re here because you were there: immigration and the end of empire

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    In this author interview, we speak to Dr Ian Sanjay Patel about his new book, We’re Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire, which explores post-war immigration laws, the afterlives of British imperial citizenship and related attempts to reimagine and rejuvenate British imperialism after 1945. Contributing to transnational histories of decolonisation, the book also explores the interconnections between human rights, post-war migration and international diplomacy. Author Interview with Dr Ian Sanjay Patel, author of We’re Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire. Verso. 2021

    sj-docx-1-jet-10.1177_15266028221134887 – Supplemental material for Impact of Chronic Kidney Disease on In-Hospital Outcomes of Hospitalizations With Acute Limb Ischemia Undergoing Endovascular Therapy

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jet-10.1177_15266028221134887 for Impact of Chronic Kidney Disease on In-Hospital Outcomes of Hospitalizations With Acute Limb Ischemia Undergoing Endovascular Therapy by Harsh P. Patel, Dean Decter, Samarthkumar Thakkar, Mahesh Anantha-Narayanan, Ashish Kumar, Aakash R Sheth, Salman Zahid, Bhavin A. Patel, Toralben Patel, Hiteshkumar Devani, Vrushali Shah, Preet Mayank Doshi, Smit Patel, Mariam Shariff, Devina Adalja, Saraschandra Vallabhajosyula and Rajkumar Doshi in Journal of Endovascular Therapy</p

    WSO895651 Supplemental Material2 - Supplemental material for Stroke in young cannabis users (18–49 years): National trends in hospitalizations and outcomes

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    Supplemental material, WSO895651 Supplemental Material2 for Stroke in young cannabis users (18–49 years): National trends in hospitalizations and outcomes by Rupak Desai, Sandeep Singh, Krupa Patel, Hemant Goyal, Manan Shah, Zeeshan Mansuri, Smit Patel, Zabeen K Mahuwala, Larry B Goldstein and Adnan I Qureshi in International Journal of Stroke</p

    WSO895651 Supplemental Material1 - Supplemental material for Stroke in young cannabis users (18–49 years): National trends in hospitalizations and outcomes

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    Supplemental material, WSO895651 Supplemental Material1 for Stroke in young cannabis users (18–49 years): National trends in hospitalizations and outcomes by Rupak Desai, Sandeep Singh, Krupa Patel, Hemant Goyal, Manan Shah, Zeeshan Mansuri, Smit Patel, Zabeen K Mahuwala, Larry B Goldstein and Adnan I Qureshi in International Journal of Stroke</p

    Redesigning Health Care: How Innovative Care can Heal and Not Just Treat our Patients

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    What if we see every patient as every other painting in a museum of humans? What if we make patients feel less daunted by the walls of hospitals and smell of drugs? The greatest challenge for the health care professionals today is to treat patients with care that not only cures externally, but also soulfully – indirectly increasing patient outcome with greater satisfaction for provider and takers. Today professionals should care for patients creatively, not to just treat them but HEAL. We need to ideate, innovate, motivate and curate a creative care ! Recently, as a designer student pharmacist and Interprofessional council senator, we had organized a small workshop with CoMa(Columbus Museum of Art) for health care professionals called "Art of analysis in Healthcare." The main objective was to teach and make health care students realize the importance of caring, compassion in a special and innovative way. Caring for a patient is an art, for whom everyone is capable of creatively taking care of. The session will talk about OADP method of an art evaluation infused to seek a patient evaluation case. Session will also make the audience to re-think and re-design the way patients are treated and give them tricks and tips to enhance patient satisfaction. Throughout recorded history, we see evidence that pictures, stories, dances, music, and drama have been central to healing rituals. Today's renewed focus on humanistic care is leading to resurgence in the knowledge and practice of incorporating the arts into health care services. Paint brushes and IV tubes may not seem to have much in common, but the arts are increasingly touted as a form of healing that can be as relevant to a patient's well-being as medication. Infused art-care therapies can be used from post-traumatic stress disorder to autism, mental health, chronic illnesses, Alzheimer's and dementia, neurological disorders and brain injuries, premature infants, and physical disabilities – to improve patients' overall health outcomes, treatment compliance, and quality of life. These interventions have shown an economic benefit. Data show that such programs result in patients requiring shorter hospital stays, less medication, and having fewer complications – all of which translates to a reduction in health care costs. Using the same principles, I would also talk about evidence-based design for the new Framework 2.0 with the Wexner Medical Center we are designing with HCD to create healthier and happier space. Consistent research has shown supporting details that I would like to address, especially a 1996 Ohio State study where effects of sounds had been evaluated to be beneficial for different types of cancers like lung, breast, colon, etc. Other research at the University of London showed better blood flow to brain with just the visuals of paintings. "If an art installation gets a patient out of his room or paintings take a person's mind off their pain and lower their stress levels, the art isn't just decorative anymore."AUTHOR AFFILIATION: Smit Patel, Medication therapy Management Intern, College of Pharmacy, [email protected] (Corresponding Author).The greatest challenge for health care professionals today is to treat patients with care that not only cures, but also heals. We need to ideate, innovate, motivate and curate creative care! Studies have shown that art, music, humor, etc. improve humanistic care that betters patient outcomes and rewards hospital revenues. With similar thoughts, a workshop for infusing "Art in Healthcare" showed how deeply art can influence how health care students treat and counsel patients. Evidence-based programs for creative spaces in hospitals have been studied in the past; an instrumental effect would be seen with such creative intervention for the Framework 2.0 with the Wexner Medical Center impacting future patients and employees for happier and healthier outcomes

    Embedded in the Body: the Poetry, History and Politics of Migritude with Shailja Patel (2021-02-25)

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    Online discussion, reading and Q&A; Thursday, February 25 at 4:00PM CST; Shailja Patel is the bestselling author of Migritude, taught in over 100 colleges and universities worldwide. Patel's poems have been translated into 17 languages, and been featured in the Smithsonian. The Nobel Women's Initiative honored her with a Global Feminist Spotlight. She is currently a Research Associate at Five College Women's Studies Research Center.Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies program; Alworth Institute for International Studies; Department of Anthropology, Sociology & Criminology; English program; Writing Studies programPatel, Shailja. (2021). Embedded in the Body: the Poetry, History and Politics of Migritude with Shailja Patel (2021-02-25). Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/220654

    The Patel trials: further evidence of the need to reform the Griffith Codes

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    This article argues that the two trials of Dr Jayant Patel for criminal medical negligence under s 288 of the Criminal Code 1899 Act (Qld) highlight the inadequacies of the duty provisions in the Griffith Codes of Queensland and Western Australia. The difficulties with these duty provisions extend beyond causation and go to the heart of the construction of the Griffith Codes. The fundamental problem lies in the wording of s 23 of both the Queensland and the Western Australia Codes, the principal section dealing with criminal responsibility, which allows a prosecution for criminal negligence under two alternative routes with different standards of proof, and the importation of common law criminal negligence into the duty provisions in the absence of a specified fault element in the relevant Code sections. It is further contended that other criminal law jurisdictions in Australia, such as the Criminal Code 1995 (Cth), offer a better model for the prosecution of criminal negligence cases that flow from breach of a specified duty. The article has greatly benefited from comments provided to the author by Justice HG Fryberg, who conducted the second Patel trial

    dc121p-patel

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    Abstract Researchers have used machine learning algorithms to solve hard problems in a variety of domains, enabling exciting, new applications of computing. However, research results have not transferred to software solutions. In part, this is because developing software with machine learning algorithms is itself difficult. My dissertation work aims to understand why using machine learning is difficult and to create tools that lower the bar so that more developers can effectively use machine learning
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